Monkey version of HIV older than previously believed

London, May 22 (ANI): SIV, the HIV-like virus that infects monkeys is at least 100,000 if not millions of years old, according to scientists.

The vast age of the monkey virus, which does not cause illness in most of its hosts, suggests that it may take a long time for HIV to become equally benign in humans.

"Don't expect human evolution to unfold in a timeframe that will do anything good for us. We're not going to evolve adaptations that will mitigate this virus in any acceptable timescale, so we need other solutions," Nature quoted Michael Worobey, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Arizona in Tucson, as telling meeting attendees.

Most researchers agree that the pandemic strain of HIV that currently infects more than 33 million people worldwide started in central Africa around 100 years ago, when hunters contracted the virus through tainted bushmeat.

Using DNA sequence data taken from SIV strains, some have estimated that SIV is a few thousand years old, whereas others suggest that the virus dates back only a couple of hundred years.

However, these projections assume that SIV DNA sequences mutate at the same rate as HIV's modern pace of evolution, which many say is much faster than historic rates of change.

Thus, some researchers have sought other lines of evidence. A related virus found embedded within the genome of lemurs from Madagascar pointed to a timescale of millions of years.

And although SIV-infected chimpanzees remain susceptible to disease (see 'Wild chimpanzees get AIDS-like illness'), other wild monkeys that have coexisted with SIV for longer, including sooty mangabeys and African green monkeys, seem to have evolved complete immunity to the virus, indicating an extended period of co-evolution.

To pin down the age of SIV, Worobey teamed up with Preston Marx, a virologist at the Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana, who, since 2001, has been looking for viruses in monkey bushmeat taken from Bioko, an island located 32 kilometres off the west coast of Cameroon.

The researchers discovered new strains of the virus in three monkey species that had never before been shown to be exposed to SIV, including the red-eared guenon (Cercopithecus erythrotis), as well as a fourth monkey, drills (Mandrillus leucophaeus), close relatives of baboons.

Worobey compared DNA sequences taken from SIV strains infecting drills from both Bioko and the mainland.

Crucially, he knew from geological records that the island separated from continental Africa around 12,000 years ago.

Assuming that the strains had had at least 12,000 years to evolve apart, he determined that the mutation rate of SIV is much slower than originally thought.

Using this approach, he suggested that earlier DNA-based calculations were wrong, and estimated that SIV must be at least 100,000 years old.

The study was presented at a meeting of the New York Academy of Sciences. (ANI)